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Moving to Arlington, TX?

Here are the local rules you need to know before you unpack.

Every city has its own set of local ordinances that go beyond state and federal law. From when you can mow your lawn to whether you can park your RV in the driveway, these rules affect daily life in ways most people do not expect. This guide covers the key ordinances in Arlington across 40 categories and 197 specific rules we track.

50 Permissive97 Moderate50 Strict

πŸ”Š Noise Ordinances

Noise rules affect everything from weekend parties to lawn care schedules. Quiet hours, construction restrictions, and barking dog limits vary widely between cities.

Barking Dogs

Some Restrictions

Arlington treats persistent barking, howling, or yelping as a public nuisance under Chapter 22 (Noise) and Chapter 5 (Animals). A dog that barks continuously for an extended period, or intermittently over a longer stretch, in a way that disturbs neighbors can trigger citations to the owner. Enforcement runs through Animal Services and Code Compliance, with Ask Arlington 311 as the intake channel.

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Industrial Noise

Some Restrictions

Industrial noise in Arlington is regulated through Chapter 22 (Noise) and the zoning ordinance. Facilities in Light Industrial (LI) and Industrial Manufacturing (IM) districts near Great Southwest Parkway, Avenue E, and the SH 360 corridor must not produce noise that exceeds nuisance limits at the boundary of adjacent residential or commercial districts. Continuous process noise, truck loading, and rooftop equipment are the typical enforcement targets.

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Leaf Blower Rules

Few Restrictions

Arlington does not have a standalone leaf blower ordinance or decibel cap specific to blowers. Gas and electric blowers are legal to operate, but they are subject to the general noise limits in Chapter 22 and the construction-hour conventions (roughly 7 AM to 10 PM near residential areas). Commercial landscapers servicing HOAs around Viridian, Highlands, and Dalworthington Gardens must observe neighborhood quiet hours.

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Aircraft Noise

Few Restrictions

Aircraft noise in Arlington is governed almost entirely by the Federal Aviation Administration, not by the city. DFW International Airport, Dallas Love Field, Arlington Municipal Airport (GKY), and Grand Prairie Airport all generate overflights, and because 49 U.S.C. Section 40103 and FAA regulations preempt local control of airspace, Arlington cannot impose curfews or altitude rules on aircraft operations.

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Outdoor Music

Some Restrictions

Outdoor amplified music in Arlington requires compliance with Chapter 22 (Noise) and, for venues or events, specific use permits or special event permits. Entertainment District venues around AT&T Stadium, Globe Life Field, Texas Live!, Choctaw Stadium, and the surrounding bars operate under site-specific agreements. Residential backyard parties are held to the plainly-audible standard and the 10 PM common courtesy hour.

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Construction Hours

Some Restrictions

Arlington restricts construction noise through Chapter 22 (Noise) of the Code of Ordinances. Commercial and residential construction is generally permitted between 7:00 AM and 10:00 PM, with stricter limits when activity is adjacent to residential zones. Early morning impact work (hammering, jackhammers, pile driving) near homes is the most common complaint routed through Ask Arlington 311.

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Decibel Limits

Some Restrictions

Arlington primarily enforces noise through a plainly-audible and reasonable-person nuisance standard in Chapter 22 rather than a fixed citywide decibel table. Specific decibel thresholds appear in zoning performance standards for industrial-residential boundaries and in special event permits for venues like AT&T Stadium, Globe Life Field, and Choctaw Stadium. For most residential complaints, officers do not require a meter reading to cite.

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Amplified Music & Events

Some Restrictions

Arlington regulates amplified music under general noise ordinance. Entertainment district near AT&T Stadium and Globe Life Field has special event permits for concerts and stadium events.

Permit: Required for public eventsEntertainment District: Special event permits

Quiet Hours

Some Restrictions

Arlington enforces noise limits under Nuisance Chapter Sec. 2.03(M) with 85 dBA daytime and 65 dBA nighttime limits. Quiet hours are 10 PM–7 AM Mon–Thu and midnight–7 AM Fri–Sat. The entertainment district near AT&T Stadium and Globe Life Field has special event exemptions.

Code Section: Nuisance Ch. Sec. 2.03(M)Day Limit: 85 dBA

🏠 Short-Term Rentals

If you plan to rent out your home on Airbnb or VRBO - even occasionally - you need to know the local STR rules before listing.

Insurance Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington requires short-term rental operators to carry liability insurance, typically at a minimum of $500,000 to $1,000,000 per occurrence, and to provide proof of coverage at registration. Standard homeowner policies usually exclude commercial short-term rental use, so hosts need either a dedicated STR policy, a homeowner endorsement, or reliance on platform-provided coverage that meets the city's minimums.

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Occupancy Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington's short-term rental ordinance caps guest occupancy based on bedroom count, typically two guests per bedroom plus up to two additional, with an overall ceiling tied to the unit's International Property Maintenance Code floor-area and egress standards. Events, parties, and weddings at STRs are not permitted without a separate event authorization, and violations can trigger fines and registration revocation.

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Registration Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington requires all short-term rental operators to register with the city, pay hotel occupancy tax, and comply with zoning restrictions that limit STRs to specific districts. Registration includes safety inspections, local contact designation, and occupancy limits tied to bedroom count.

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Parking Rules

Some Restrictions

Arlington's short-term rental ordinance requires that all guest vehicles park on-site in the driveway or dedicated parking pad, with a cap tied to bedroom count. Street parking is discouraged and specifically prohibited for STR guests in many neighborhoods around AT&T Stadium and Globe Life Field where event-day parking is already contested. Overnight parking on unpaved surfaces is prohibited citywide.

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Taxes & Fees

Some Restrictions

Short-term rentals in Arlington are subject to the state hotel occupancy tax (6 percent under Texas Tax Code Chapter 156), the city hotel occupancy tax under Tax Code Chapter 351 (9 percent in Arlington), and local STR registration fees. Operators must register annually with the city, collect and remit HOT monthly or quarterly, and comply with the STR ordinance adopted in the Entertainment District and citywide.

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Night Caps

Some Restrictions

Arlington's short-term rental ordinance does not impose a blanket annual night cap on hosted STRs, but certain zoning overlays and the Entertainment District rules can limit operations in non-permitted areas. Non-owner-occupied STRs are only allowed in specific zoning districts; operating outside those districts is prohibited regardless of night count. Operators should confirm the zoning of each property before marketing.

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Extended Home Share

Few Restrictions

Arlington does not cap the number of nights a host may rent out a portion of their home each year. Extended home-share arrangements are allowed without separate annual night limits, subject only to the standard STR permit and occupancy rules.

Annual night cap: NoneLong stays allowed: Yes

Host Presence Rule

Few Restrictions

Arlington does not require the property owner or operator to be physically present during a short-term rental stay, allowing fully unhosted whole-home rentals so long as the local STR permit, occupancy caps, and 24-hour responsible-party contact requirements are satisfied.

Host onsite required: NoWhole-home allowed: Yes

Repeat Violator Strikes

Some Restrictions

Arlington may suspend or revoke a short-term rental permit when an operator accumulates three substantiated violations within a 12-month period, including noise, parking, occupancy, or unpaid hotel-occupancy-tax infractions, after notice and an administrative appeal opportunity.

Strikes for revocation: ThreeLookback window: 12 months

Host Platform Liability

Few Restrictions

Arlington places primary compliance and tax-collection responsibility on the host or operator, not on listing platforms like Airbnb or Vrbo. Platforms collect state hotel-occupancy tax under voluntary agreements, but the city does not impose direct platform fines for individual host violations.

Platform fines: LimitedState tax collection: By platform

Primary-Residence-Only Rule

Few Restrictions

Arlington does not restrict short-term rentals to a hosts primary residence. Investors may operate non-owner-occupied STRs citywide, and Texas HB 1620 reinforces this permissive stance by limiting municipal authority to impose primary-residence requirements on whole-home rentals.

Primary-residence rule: NoneInvestor STRs allowed: Yes

Permit Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington requires STR permits through ArlingtonPermits.com with a $500 non-refundable annual fee. STRs are restricted to a designated STR Zone near the entertainment district. Over 90% of the city is off-limits to short-term rentals under Ord. 19-014.

Permit Fee: $500/year non-refundableSTR Zone: ~1 mile from entertainment district

Noise Rules

Some Restrictions

Arlington STRs must comply with general noise ordinance. Many cities impose stricter quiet hours for rentals. Complaints can trigger permit review.

Quiet Hours: Per city noise ordinanceParties: Prohibited at most STRs

πŸ”₯ Fire Regulations

Fire pit rules, fireworks restrictions, and brush clearance requirements are especially important if you are coming from a state with different fire risk profiles.

Wildfire Zones

Few Restrictions

Arlington is not classified as a state wildfire hazard zone and does not adopt the International Wildland-Urban Interface Code. Fire risk concentrates in western cross-timber neighborhoods and Trinity River corridor, managed through standard brush-clearance and burn-ban enforcement rather than WUI-specific construction rules.

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Fireworks

Heavy Restrictions

Fireworks are completely banned inside Arlington city limits under authority of Texas Occupations Code Chapter 2154, which allows municipalities over 100,000 population to prohibit consumer fireworks. Possession, sale, and discharge all carry Class C misdemeanor penalties up to $2,000 per offense.

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Smoke Detectors

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington follows Texas Health and Safety Code Chapter 766 requiring smoke alarms in every sleeping area and outside each separate bedroom of all one- and two-family dwellings. Landlords must provide and maintain detectors in all rental units, and battery-powered alarms must be replaced with 10-year sealed lithium units on failure.

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Backyard Fires

Some Restrictions

Arlington prohibits open burning of yard waste and trash citywide under Texas Commission on Environmental Quality rules and local fire code. Recreational fires in portable fireplaces and contained fire pits are allowed with setback and fuel restrictions but are suspended during Tarrant County burn bans.

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Brush Clearance

Some Restrictions

Arlington property owners must keep weeds, grass, and brush below 12 inches tall and maintain defensible space around structures. The city can issue clearance orders, perform the work itself, and lien the property for costs plus a $250 administrative fee.

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Propane Storage

Some Restrictions

Arlington follows the International Fire Code as adopted in Chapter 10 of the City Code, which limits residential propane storage and requires safe distances from buildings, ignition sources, and property lines. Larger tanks need Arlington Fire Marshal review.

Code basis: Adopted IFCOutdoor cylinder cap: Forty pounds typical

Outdoor Burning

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington bans most outdoor burning within city limits. Authorized burns require a $1,000 permit and Fire Prevention inspection. Wind speed must be 5–16 mph, relative humidity above 35%, and burning during daylight only. No burning on ozone alert days.

Permit Fee: $1,000 for authorized burnsWind Speed: 5–16 mph required

Fire Pit Rules

Some Restrictions

Gas and propane fire pits are generally allowed in Arlington for recreational use. Wood-burning fire pits and bonfires are restricted under the Fire Prevention Chapter. Recreational fires must use approved containers and maintain clearance from structures.

Gas/Propane: Allowed without permitWood-Burning: Restricted

πŸš— Parking Rules

Parking rules catch more new residents off guard than almost any other ordinance. RV storage, overnight parking bans, and driveway regulations vary significantly.

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

Arlington requires vehicles in residential driveways to park on improved surfaces β€” concrete, asphalt, or approved pavers β€” and prohibits parking on front yard grass or in side yards visible from the street. Driveways must meet width and apron standards set by the Unified Development Code.

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Overnight Parking

Some Restrictions

Arlington has no blanket citywide overnight parking ban, but specific streets post no-overnight-parking signs between 2 AM and 6 AM, and HOAs commonly impose private overnight restrictions. RVs, boats, and trailers face strict overnight rules on streets and in driveways under residential zoning.

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Street Parking Limits

Some Restrictions

Arlington allows on-street parking on most residential streets but requires vehicles to face with the flow of traffic, park within 18 inches of the curb, and avoid blocking driveways, hydrants, and intersections. Entertainment District blocks enforce strict event-day restrictions during Cowboys, Rangers, and concert events.

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EV Charging

Few Restrictions

Arlington does not restrict residential EV charging station installation, and Texas Occupations Code Β§2157 limits HOA authority to prohibit EV chargers. Permits are required for 240V Level 2 installations, and public chargers are expanding at city facilities and Entertainment District garages.

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Abandoned Vehicles

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington enforces Texas Transportation Code Chapter 683 defining abandoned vehicles as those left on public property over 48 hours or private property without consent. Inoperable vehicles on private property visible from public view must be removed, covered in an enclosed garage, or screened within 72 hours of notice.

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RV & Boat Parking

Some Restrictions

Arlington prohibits parking RVs, motorhomes over 30 feet, and vehicles with carrying capacity over 4,000 lbs in any yard. RVs must be stored behind the front building line on improved surfaces. All stored vehicles must have current registration.

Max Length in Yard: 30 ft for trailers/motorhomesCarrying Capacity: 4,000 lbs max in yard

Commercial Vehicle Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Arlington prohibits parking commercial vehicles on public streets less than 38 feet wide. Mobile homes cannot be parked outside permitted locations. Exceptions for active loading/unloading, utility repairs, and municipal vehicles.

Street Width: 38 ft minimum for commercialLoading/Unloading: Exempt while active

🧱 Fence Regulations

Planning to put up a fence? Height limits, material restrictions, and permit requirements differ by city - and sometimes by which side of the property the fence sits on.

Fence Requirements

Some Restrictions

Arlington's Unified Development Code limits residential fences to 4 feet in front yards and 8 feet in side and rear yards. Fences cannot obstruct corner visibility triangles, drainage easements, or sightlines at driveways. Commercial and industrial properties have separate standards and often require screening fences along residential boundaries.

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Retaining Walls

Heavy Restrictions

Retaining walls over 4 feet in height (measured from bottom of footing to top of wall) require a building permit and engineered plans sealed by a Texas-licensed professional engineer. Walls under 4 feet typically do not require a permit but must comply with drainage and setback standards. Tiered walls may be treated as a single wall if spaced too closely.

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Pool Barriers

Heavy Restrictions

Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 757 and Arlington's adopted pool code require all residential swimming pools and spas deeper than 18 inches to be enclosed by a barrier at least 48 inches tall with self-closing, self-latching gates. Barriers must be completed and inspected before the pool can be filled with water.

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Neighbor Fence Rules

Few Restrictions

Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code Chapter 841 governs partition fences between adjoining landowners, but Arlington does not mandate shared cost or construction of boundary fences. Disputes between neighbors are generally civil matters. The city encourages written agreements and enforces only zoning, height, and nuisance standards, not cost-sharing between private property owners.

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Material Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Arlington permits wood, masonry, wrought iron, vinyl, and chain link for residential fences, with restrictions on barbed wire, razor wire, and electrified fencing in residential zones. Front yard fences must be decorative and at least 50% open; solid materials are limited to side and rear yards.

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Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Arlington caps residential fences at 4 feet in front yards and 8 feet in side and rear yards under the Unified Development Code. Fences over 7 feet require a building permit, and corner-lot sight triangles restrict fence height near intersections to preserve driver visibility.

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Permit Requirements

Some Restrictions

Arlington requires a building permit for most fence construction, replacement, or repair that exceeds 50% of the existing fence length. Fences 8 feet and under in residential zones generally do not require a separate permit, but must comply with zoning setback, height, and location standards. Permits are issued through the Community Development and Planning Department.

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πŸ” Animal Ordinances

Pet owners and aspiring chicken keepers should check local animal ordinances before signing a lease or closing on a home.

Livestock

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington prohibits traditional livestock (cattle, horses, goats, sheep, swine) on residential lots smaller than 1 acre. Keeping livestock requires Agricultural (A) zoning or legally grandfathered pre-annexation agricultural use. Violations result in fines and impoundment by Arlington Animal Services.

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Wildlife Feeding

Some Restrictions

Arlington prohibits intentional feeding of wildlife that creates a nuisance, health risk, or attracts dangerous animals. Feeding songbirds and squirrels from properly maintained feeders is permitted, but leaving food for deer, feral hogs, raccoons, coyotes, or stray cats can result in citations under the city's nuisance and public health ordinances.

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Exotic Pets

Heavy Restrictions

Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 822 Subchapter E regulates dangerous wild animals (big cats, bears, primates, venomous reptiles), requiring state registration, $100,000 insurance, and secure containment. Arlington Code of Ordinances further prohibits these dangerous wild animals in most residential zones regardless of state permit.

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Breed Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Texas Health & Safety Code Β§822.047 prohibits cities from passing breed-specific legislation, and Arlington does not ban any dog breed. The city instead enforces dangerous-dog and aggressive-dog designations based on behavior. Owners of dogs declared dangerous face strict confinement, liability insurance, and registration requirements.

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Chickens & Livestock

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington Code of Ordinances Chapter 8 permits backyard chickens (hens only, no roosters) on lots at least 10,000 square feet, with coops set back from property lines. Traditional livestock (cattle, horses, goats, sheep, pigs) is prohibited on lots under 1 acre and requires Agricultural zoning or grandfathered rights.

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Beekeeping

Some Restrictions

Backyard beekeeping is permitted in Arlington subject to Texas Agriculture Code Chapter 131 and city nuisance standards. Beekeepers must register with the Texas Apiary Inspection Service, maintain hives with flyway barriers near property lines, and provide water sources to prevent bees from congregating at neighbors' pools.

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Microchipping

Some Restrictions

Arlington Animal Services microchips every dog and cat released from the shelter and strongly encourages residents to microchip pets so strays can be reunited quickly. Updated registration with a national chip database is required for owner contact information.

Required ID: Tag or microchipImplant location: Animal Services shelter

Mandatory Spay/Neuter

Some Restrictions

Arlington Animal Services requires sterilization of all dogs and cats adopted from the shelter or reclaimed after a second impoundment. The policy aims to curb overpopulation in Tarrant County and reduce repeat intake at the East Division facility.

Trigger: Shelter release or 2nd impoundCompliance window: Thirty days

Pet Limits

Some Restrictions

Arlington restricts the number of dogs and cats per single-family residence under city code to avoid kennel-like conditions in residential neighborhoods. Households exceeding the threshold need a multi-pet permit and inspection by Animal Services.

Default dog limit: Four per homeDefault cat limit: Four per home

Cat Rules

Some Restrictions

Arlington requires cats over four months old to be vaccinated against rabies and registered with Arlington Animal Services. Cats running at large may be impounded, and free-roaming community cats must be managed under approved trap-neuter-return programs.

Rabies vaccine age: Four monthsShelter location: Brown Boulevard East Division

Animal Hoarding

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington Animal Services investigates suspected animal hoarding under Texas cruelty statutes when animals are kept in conditions causing harm. Cases are referred to Arlington Police and Tarrant County prosecutors when warranted, with civil seizure available.

Civil seizure law: Texas HSC Chapter 821Cruelty statute: Texas Penal Code 42

Dog Leash Laws

Some Restrictions

Arlington requires dogs on leash in public. Off-leash in designated parks only. License and rabies vaccination required. TX HSC Β§822.013 covers dogs at large.

Leash: Required in publicOff-Leash: Designated parks only

🌿 Landscaping Rules

From grass height limits to tree removal permits, landscaping rules can surprise new homeowners, especially in drought-prone areas with water restrictions.

Tree Removal & Heritage Trees

Some Restrictions

Arlington's tree preservation ordinance regulates removal of protected trees on non-single-family development sites. Single-family homeowners generally may remove trees on their own property without a permit. Removal of trees in street rights-of-way or on commercial, multifamily, and new-construction sites requires approval and may trigger mitigation plantings.

Single-Family Permit: Not generally requiredCommercial/Multifamily: Permit and mitigation required

Native Plants

Few Restrictions

Arlington encourages native and drought-tolerant landscaping through water-conservation programs and does not restrict homeowners from replacing turf with native plants. Texas Property Code Section 202.007 prohibits HOAs from banning drought-resistant landscaping or water-conserving turf. Maintained native plantings are exempt from the 12-inch weed limit if kept in an orderly condition.

City Permit: Not requiredHOA Ban: Prohibited by Β§202.007

Artificial Turf

Some Restrictions

Arlington does not ban residential artificial turf but may regulate its use through zoning in front-yard landscape areas and drainage standards. HOAs often restrict artificial turf, though Texas courts have generally not extended Property Code 202.007 to artificial turf. Quality commercial-grade products with proper drainage typically meet city landscape requirements.

City Ban: None for residentialHOA Restrictions: Common and enforceable

Rainwater Harvesting

Few Restrictions

Rainwater harvesting is strongly encouraged in Arlington and protected by Texas Property Code Section 202.007, which prohibits HOAs from banning rain barrels and cistern systems that meet reasonable aesthetic standards. Texas Water Code Chapter 11 confirms that rainwater captured on your property is yours to use. Arlington offers rebates and educational programs.

City Permit (Rain Barrel): Not requiredTexas Property Code: Β§202.007 protects systems

Weed Ordinances

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington prohibits property owners from allowing weeds, rank vegetation, or noxious plants to grow above 12 inches anywhere on their lot. The nuisance-vegetation ordinance also targets brush piles and overgrown vacant lots that attract rodents and snakes. Enforcement runs year-round but peaks in the hot, humid summer months.

Height Limit: 12 inchesNotice Period: 7-10 days typical

Grass Height Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington prohibits weeds, grass, and uncultivated vegetation from exceeding 12 inches on any residential or commercial property. Property owners must maintain lawns, parkways, and alleys adjacent to their property. The city pursues high-weed complaints aggressively during the hot summer growing season when rapid growth is common.

Maximum Height: 12 inchesCompliance Time: 7-10 days after notice

Water Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington enforces year-round twice-per-week outdoor watering limits, with additional Stage 1 through Stage 4 drought restrictions triggered by Tarrant Regional Water District conditions at Lake Arlington and other regional reservoirs. Watering is prohibited between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. from April through October to reduce evaporation in the North Texas heat.

Base Schedule: 2 days/week by addressNo-Water Hours: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. (Apr-Oct)

Tree Trimming

Some Restrictions

Arlington requires property owners to trim trees so that branches clear public sidewalks by at least 8 feet and public streets by at least 14 feet. Trees overhanging alleys must not obstruct solid waste trucks. Trimming of trees on private property generally does not require a permit, but protected and heritage trees on development sites are regulated.

Sidewalk Clearance: 8 feet minimumStreet Clearance: 14 feet minimum

πŸ’Ό Home Business

Working from home is common, but running a business from home often requires permits and must comply with zoning restrictions on customer traffic and signage.

Home Occupation Permits

Some Restrictions

Arlington permits home-based businesses in residential zones as accessory uses under the Unified Development Code, without a standalone home occupation permit in most cases. Operators must register with the city for a business tax receipt where applicable and comply with standards limiting employees, signage, customer visits, and exterior alterations so the residential character of the neighborhood is preserved.

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Zoning Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Arlington permits home occupations in residential zones provided the business is clearly secondary to the home's use as a dwelling. Occupations must be conducted indoors, use no more than 25% of the floor area, have no non-resident employees on site, and not change the residential character of the property. A home occupation registration is required.

Registration: RequiredFloor Area Limit: 25% of dwelling

Signage Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington prohibits any exterior signage identifying a home occupation at a residential property. No signs, window graphics, illuminated lettering, or yard signs advertising a home business are permitted in residential zoning districts. The business must remain invisible from the street to preserve neighborhood character.

Exterior Signs: ProhibitedWindow Graphics: Prohibited

Home Daycare

Some Restrictions

Arlington allows registered and licensed child-care homes in residential districts as home occupations under the Unified Development Code. State licensing through the Texas Health and Human Services Commission is required under Texas Human Resources Code Chapter 42, and operators must also meet Arlington's home occupation standards including limits on nonresident employees, signage, and client traffic.

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Cottage Food Operations

Few Restrictions

Arlington follows the Texas Cottage Food Law under Health and Safety Code Chapter 437, which allows individuals to sell certain non-potentially-hazardous foods made in a home kitchen without a food-establishment license. Annual gross sales are limited, required labeling must be used, and the foods must be sold directly to consumers. A food-handler certificate is required.

Governing Law: TX H&S Code Β§437Annual Sales Cap: $50,000 gross

Customer Traffic Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington strictly limits customer and client visits to home occupations. The business must not generate traffic volumes greater than normal residential use. Clients by appointment only are generally acceptable, but walk-in retail, group classes, and frequent deliveries are prohibited. Commercial vehicle traffic and additional on-street parking demand are grounds for revocation.

Retail Walk-Ins: ProhibitedGroup Classes: Prohibited

🏊 Swimming Pools & Spas

Pool ownership comes with safety fencing requirements, permit obligations, and drainage rules that vary by jurisdiction.

Pool Permits

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington requires building permits for in-ground and above-ground pools exceeding 24 inches in depth, along with separate electrical and plumbing permits. The city enforces the International Residential Code with Texas amendments, and pools must comply with setback, barrier, and equipment placement standards set in the Unified Development Code.

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Fencing Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington requires all residential swimming pools capable of holding water 24 inches deep or more to be enclosed by a barrier at least 48 inches high with self-closing, self-latching gates. Requirements follow IRC Appendix G and the International Swimming Pool and Spa Code as amended by Texas, with additional rules for doors leading directly from the home to the pool.

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Hot Tub Rules

Some Restrictions

Hot tubs and spas in Arlington require building and electrical permits when installed, and must meet pool barrier rules unless fitted with an approved locking safety cover meeting ASTM F1346. Electrical hookups require GFCI protection and proper bonding, and hard-wired spas must be installed by licensed electricians.

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Above-Ground Pools

Heavy Restrictions

Above-ground pools in Arlington capable of holding water deeper than 24 inches require a building permit and must meet the same barrier, electrical, and setback standards as in-ground pools. Ladders must be removable or securable to prevent unsupervised child access when the pool is not in use.

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Safety Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington residential pools must comply with federal anti-entrapment drain requirements, pool barrier and alarm standards, and electrical bonding rules. Public and semi-public pools face stricter oversight under Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 757, including lifeguard, signage, and water quality requirements enforced by the Texas Department of State Health Services.

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πŸ—οΈ Accessory Structures

Thinking about an ADU, shed, or garage conversion? Local rules on accessory structures have changed rapidly in recent years, especially in California.

Carport Rules

Some Restrictions

Carports in Arlington require building permits and must meet setback, height, and lot coverage rules in the Unified Development Code. Attached carports follow main-structure setbacks, while detached carports follow accessory structure rules. Fabric or metal 'portable' carports are generally not allowed as permanent front-yard structures.

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Tiny Homes

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington regulates tiny homes based on whether they are built on permanent foundations as single-family dwellings or on wheels as RVs. Foundation-built tiny homes must meet the full International Residential Code and minimum dwelling size standards, while tiny homes on wheels are treated as recreational vehicles and cannot be used as permanent residences in residential zones.

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ADU Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington allows accessory dwelling units in limited residential zoning districts subject to Unified Development Code standards covering size, owner-occupancy, setbacks, and parking. Unlike California or Oregon, Texas has no statewide ADU mandate, so Arlington's local zoning controls whether, where, and how an ADU can be built.

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Shed Rules

Some Restrictions

Arlington requires building permits for storage sheds and accessory buildings larger than 200 square feet, while smaller sheds are exempt from permits but must still meet setback, height, and zoning standards. All sheds must be placed in side or rear yards and typically kept 3 feet from property lines.

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Garage Conversions

Heavy Restrictions

Converting a garage into living space in Arlington requires a building permit, full compliance with the International Residential Code for habitable rooms, and replacement of required off-street parking. Conversions that create a second dwelling unit must also meet ADU zoning standards and are often restricted by HOA covenants.

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ADU Rental Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington ADUs may be rented long-term (30+ days) provided owner occupancy continues under the typical SUP condition. Short-term rentals (under 30 days) are heavily restricted under Arlington City Code Chapter 7.5 (the 2019 STR ordinance), with single-family districts limited to one designated STR per block face and registration required. ADUs operated as STRs face strict registration, parking, and notification rules.

Long-Term (30+ days): Permitted with owner occupancySTR Code: Arlington City Code Ch. 7.5

ADU Impact Fees

Some Restrictions

Arlington charges standard water/sewer impact fees on ADUs requiring new connections under Arlington City Code Chapter 35. Roadway impact fees under Chapter 35.5 may apply for new dwelling units. Building permit fees through the OneStart portal are based on construction valuation. Texas has no statewide ADU fee waiver. Sharing the principal dwelling's utilities is the most common cost-reduction strategy.

Permit Fee Range: $500–$1,200 typicalWater Impact Fee: ~$2,500–$4,500 (new tap)

ADU Owner Occupancy

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington typically imposes owner-occupancy as a condition of the Specific Use Permit granted for accessory living quarters under UDC Article 4. The owner must occupy either the principal dwelling or the ADU as a permanent residence. A recorded deed restriction with the Tarrant County Clerk is generally required. Texas has not preempted local owner-occupancy rules.

Code Section: Arlington UDC Art. 4 (SUP)Owner Occupancy: Required (typical SUP condition)

ADU Permits

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington allows accessory dwelling units only in limited residential districts under the Arlington Unified Development Code (UDC) Article 4. Detached ADUs (called 'guest quarters' or 'accessory living quarters') typically require a Specific Use Permit (SUP) reviewed by Planning and Zoning Commission and approved by City Council. Building permits issue only after the SUP is granted. Texas has not preempted local discretionary review.

Code Section: Arlington UDC Art. 4 & 5Review Type: Specific Use Permit (discretionary)

πŸ– Outdoor Cooking

Smoker Rules

Few Restrictions

Arlington has no city ordinance specifically regulating residential backyard smokers, pellet grills, or wood-fired ovens. Operation is governed by general nuisance provisions of Arlington City Code Chapter 8 (Health/Sanitation) and the fire-clearance rules of Chapter 11. Persistent dense smoke can trigger nuisance complaints. HOAs in the Highlands, Viridian, Pantego-adjacent neighborhoods, and Entertainment District condos commonly govern frequency and aesthetics.

City Smoker Code: NoneNuisance Code: Arlington Code Ch. 8

BBQ & Propane Rules

Some Restrictions

Arlington adopts the 2018 International Fire Code under Arlington City Code Chapter 11. IFC Β§ 308.1.4 prohibits open-flame cooking devices and LP-gas containers larger than 1 lb on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction at multi-family buildings. Single-family backyard grilling is unrestricted. Tarrant County burn bans during drought target open burning of vegetation, not commercial grills.

Code Adopted: 2018 IFC Β§ 308 via Ch. 11Multi-Family Balcony: Prohibited within 10 ft of combustible

Outdoor Kitchen Permits

Some Restrictions

Built-in outdoor kitchens in Arlington require multiple permits through the Community Development and Planning Department: a building permit for the structure, a gas-line permit for natural gas or stationary propane, an electrical permit, and a plumbing permit if connected to water/sewer. Structures must comply with UDC Article 5 setbacks (typically 5 ft side, 10 ft rear in R districts). Atmos Energy connections require separate utility coordination.

Permit Portal: Arlington OneStartTrade Permits: Gas, electrical, plumbing as applicable

πŸŽ„ Holiday Decorations

Holiday Light Rules

Few Restrictions

Arlington has no city ordinance specifying installation dates, removal deadlines, or brightness limits for residential holiday light displays. Amplified outdoor audio must comply with Arlington City Code Chapter 8 noise standards. Light directed into neighbor windows can be cited under general nuisance. HOAs in Viridian, the Highlands, and Pantego-adjacent communities commonly impose date and aesthetic limits. Texas Property Code Β§ 202.018 protects religious door displays.

City Date Rules: NoneNoise Code: Arlington Code Ch. 8 Sec. 8-3

Lawn Ornament Rules

Few Restrictions

Arlington has no city ordinance regulating residential lawn ornaments, statuary, or religious displays on private property. Property maintenance rules under Arlington City Code Chapter 12 apply to dilapidated or junk-like conditions. Texas Property Code Β§ 202.018 limits HOA restrictions on religious displays. Texas Election Code Β§ 259.002 protects political signs during campaign periods.

City Ornament Code: NoneProperty Standards: Arlington Code Ch. 12

Inflatable Display Rules

Few Restrictions

Arlington has no city ordinance specifically regulating residential inflatable holiday displays. Inflatables are permitted on private property subject to right-of-way obstruction rules under City Code Chapter 23 and the noise standards of Chapter 8. Continuous blower noise can trigger complaints during quiet hours (10 p.m. to 7 a.m.). HOAs in Viridian, the Highlands, and Downtown condos commonly impose size and duration limits.

City Inflatable Code: NoneSize/Height Limit: Not city-regulated

🌍 Environmental Rules

Vehicle Idling Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Arlington follows TCEQ regional idling rules limiting heavy-duty diesel vehicles over 14,000 pounds to five minutes of idling in the DFW ozone nonattainment area, with exemptions for traffic, safety, and active loading.

Idle limit: 5 minutesVehicle threshold: Over 14,000 pounds GVWR

Gas Leaf Blower Ban

Few Restrictions

Arlington does not ban gas-powered leaf blowers. Operators must comply with the city noise ordinance and lawn-maintenance time windows, but no fuel-type restrictions apply to landscaping equipment under current Arlington City Code provisions.

Gas blower ban: NoneHours: 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.

Climate Emergency Mobilization

Few Restrictions

Arlington City Council has not declared a climate emergency or adopted a binding climate action plan. Sustainability efforts focus on voluntary energy efficiency, tree canopy goals, and participation in regional North Central Texas Council of Governments air-quality programs.

Climate emergency: Not declaredCarbon target: None adopted

Heat Island Mitigation

Few Restrictions

Arlington addresses urban heat through Title 5 tree-protection requirements and parking-lot landscape standards rather than mandatory cool-surface rules. Asphalt parking around AT&T Stadium and Six Flags drives summer surface temperatures above 140 degrees Fahrenheit.

Lot tree ratio: 1 per 10 spacesCool roof mandate: None

Cool Roof Requirements

Few Restrictions

Arlington does not require cool or reflective roofing for residential or commercial buildings. The adopted International Energy Conservation Code sets minimum insulation values, but no solar reflectance index threshold applies to roof surfaces in the Arlington climate zone.

Cool roof mandate: NoneEnergy code: 2018 IECC adopted

Coastal Development

Few Restrictions

Arlington is a landlocked city in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, approximately 250 miles from the Gulf Coast. No coastal development regulations apply. Texas General Land Office coastal programs do not extend to inland areas.

Coastal Regulations: None β€” landlocked cityDistance to Coast: ~250 miles from Gulf

Stormwater Management

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington enforces stormwater management regulations through its Stormwater Management Department and the city's Code of Ordinances. The city operates under a Phase I MS4 NPDES permit from the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ). Arlington prohibits illicit discharges to the municipal storm drain system.

Governing Authority: Arlington Stormwater Management DeptState Authority: TCEQ NPDES permit

Erosion Control

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington requires erosion and sediment control on all construction activities. The city's stormwater management regulations and the Texas Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (TPDES) Construction General Permit require BMPs for sites disturbing one acre or more.

State Permit: TPDES TXR150000 for 1+ acrePlan Required: SW3P (Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan)

Flood Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington regulates development in FEMA-designated flood hazard areas through its Floodplain Administration program. The city participates in the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). Johnson Creek, Rush Creek, and their tributaries create significant flood risks throughout the city.

Elevation Requirement: 1 foot above BFE for residentialMajor Creeks: Johnson Creek, Rush Creek

Grading & Drainage

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington regulates grading and drainage through its building code and Unified Development Code (UDC). All grading must ensure proper drainage and cannot adversely affect neighboring properties. Arlington's expansive clay soils make drainage design particularly important.

Governing Code: UDC and Building CodeSoils: Expansive Blackland Prairie clay

🌱 Cannabis Regulations

Buffer Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Texas allows only low-THC medical cannabis under the Compassionate Use Program; Arlington has no recreational dispensary buffers because no recreational retail is lawful statewide.

State framework: Tex. HSC Ch. 487 CUPRecreational status: Illegal in Texas

Cannabis Delivery Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Only Texas Compassionate Use Program licensees may deliver low-THC cannabis to qualified patients; Arlington has no recreational delivery rules because such delivery is illegal statewide.

Authorized delivery: CUP licensees onlyRecreational delivery: Illegal in Texas

Personal Cultivation Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Texas prohibits all personal cannabis cultivation; even a single home plant violates state controlled-substances law, and Arlington has no separate ordinance because state law forbids the activity entirely.

State status: Felony cultivationPatient grow: Not allowed under CUP

Home Cultivation

Heavy Restrictions

Cannabis cultivation is illegal in Texas. Texas has one of the most restrictive cannabis laws in the nation. The Texas Compassionate Use Program (TCUP) allows very limited medical use of low-THC cannabis but does not permit home cultivation. Arlington enforces state law.

Home Cultivation: Illegal β€” felony offenseState Law: TX Health & Safety Code Ch. 481

Dispensary Zoning

Heavy Restrictions

Texas has very limited cannabis dispensaries operating under the Compassionate Use Program (TCUP). Only state-licensed dispensing organizations may distribute low-THC cannabis. Arlington does not have local dispensary zoning regulations as the state program is extremely restricted.

State Program: TCUP β€” extremely limitedLicenses: Very few statewide

β˜€οΈ Solar Energy

πŸͺ§ Sign Regulations

🏚️ Property Maintenance

Vacant Lot Maintenance

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington requires vacant lot owners to maintain their properties. Lots must be kept clear of weeds, trash, and debris. The hot Texas climate and rapid weed growth make regular maintenance necessary.

Vegetation: Must stay below 12 inchesFire Risk: Dry vegetation is a hazard

Trash Bin Storage

Some Restrictions

Arlington regulates trash container placement through its property maintenance standards. Bins must be stored out of public view when not set out for collection. The city provides standardized carts through its contracted waste hauler.

Set-Out: On scheduled collection dayRetrieval: Promptly after collection

Property Blight

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington actively enforces property blight standards through its Code Compliance division. Property owners must maintain their properties free of accumulated junk, debris, abandoned vehicles, and deteriorated conditions.

Vegetation Height: Over 12 inches is a violationVehicles: Abandoned/inoperable prohibited

Snow & Sidewalk Clearing

Few Restrictions

Arlington does not have specific snow removal ordinances. Snow and ice events are infrequent in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, occurring only a few times per year. When winter weather occurs, the city focuses on road treatment rather than sidewalk clearing mandates.

Snow Ordinance: None β€” infrequent snow eventsClimate: North Texas β€” occasional ice/snow

Garage Sale Rules

Some Restrictions

Arlington permits garage and yard sales at residential properties with limits on frequency and duration to prevent commercial activity in residential zones. No permit is required for compliant sales.

Permit Required: No permit for compliant salesLocation: Private property only

πŸ’‘ Outdoor Lighting

πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules

No-Fault Evictions

Few Restrictions

Arlington does not require just cause for eviction at lease end. Landlords may decline to renew month-to-month or fixed-term leases without stating a reason, subject only to Texas Property Code Chapter 24 notice requirements and the federal Fair Housing Act protections.

Just-cause required: NoMonth-to-month notice: 30 days

Tenant Anti-Harassment

Few Restrictions

Arlington has no city-specific tenant anti-harassment ordinance. Tenants rely on Texas Property Code Β§92.0081 prohibiting lockouts and utility shutoffs and Β§92.331 banning retaliation for repair requests, plus federal Fair Housing Act protections against discriminatory harassment.

City harassment ordinance: NoneLockout damages: 1 month rent + $1000

Security Deposit Rules

Some Restrictions

Arlington landlords follow Texas Property Code Β§92.103, which requires return of a tenants security deposit within 30 days of move-out, accompanied by an itemized list of any deductions when the deposit is not refunded in full and the tenant has provided a forwarding address.

Refund deadline: 30 daysDeposit cap: None

Section 8 Voucher Acceptance

Few Restrictions

Section 8 housing-choice vouchers are administered in Arlington through the Arlington Housing Authority, but landlord participation is voluntary. Texas state law preempts any local requirement that property owners accept vouchers, leaving program reach dependent on willing participants.

Local PHA: Arlington Housing AuthorityVouchers administered: About 4500

Source-of-Income Discrimination

Few Restrictions

Arlington does not prohibit landlord refusal of Section 8 housing-choice vouchers or other lawful sources of income. Texas Local Government Code Β§250.007 expressly preempts local source-of-income protections, leaving voucher acceptance entirely at landlord discretion citywide.

Voucher acceptance: OptionalState preemption: TX Β§250.007

AB-1482 Notice Disclosure

Few Restrictions

Texas has no analog to Californias AB 1482 statewide rent cap, so Arlington landlords face no disclosure requirement about rent-increase caps or just-cause coverage. Texas Property Code Β§92.0091 affirmatively prohibits municipal rent control and related disclosure mandates.

TX rent cap: NoneDisclosure required: No

Eviction Moratorium History

Some Restrictions

Arlington tenants were briefly protected by the federal CDC and CARES Act eviction moratoriums from 2020 through August 2021, but Texas courts and the Texas Supreme Court resumed forcible-detainer hearings in 2021. No Arlington-specific moratorium was ever enacted citywide.

City moratorium: Never enactedCDC moratorium ended: Aug 2021

Rent Control

Few Restrictions

Arlington has NO local rent control ordinance. Tex. Local Gov't Code Β§ 214.902 preempts Texas cities from enacting rent control absent a declared disaster-related housing emergency and governor approval. The Arlington Code of Ordinances contains no rent stabilization chapter.

Local Ordinance: None β€” no city rent controlPreemption Statute: Tex. Local Gov't Code Β§ 214.902

Rental Registration

Few Restrictions

Arlington does not require mandatory rental property registration. Rental properties must comply with building codes and property maintenance standards. The city relies on complaint-driven code compliance.

Registration: No mandatory registrationInspections: Complaint-driven

Just Cause Eviction

Few Restrictions

Arlington has NO local just-cause eviction ordinance. Texas is a no-cause termination state under Tex. Prop. Code Β§ 91.001 β€” a month-to-month tenancy may be ended by either party on 30 days' written notice without stating a reason. Fixed-term leases may be terminated for breach under Tex. Prop. Code Ch. 24.

Local Ordinance: None β€” state law governsMonth-to-Month Termination: 30-day notice, no cause required (Β§ 91.001)

πŸ—‘οΈ Trash & Recycling

🚁 Drone Rules

πŸ” Food Trucks & Mobile Vendors

πŸšͺ Soliciting & Door-to-Door

πŸŒ™ Curfew Laws

πŸ“ Building Setbacks & Zoning

🌳 Tree Protection

🏷️ Garage & Yard Sales

πŸ”§ Building Safety

Lead Paint

Some Restrictions

Federal and Texas rules require lead-based paint disclosures before sale or rent of pre-1978 housing in Arlington. Renovations must use EPA Lead Renovation, Repair, and Painting certified contractors and follow lead-safe work practices.

Trigger year: Pre-1978 housingDisclosure timing: Before sale or lease

Fire Sprinkler Requirements

Some Restrictions

Arlington requires fire sprinkler systems in most new commercial buildings, multifamily structures, and certain large single-family homes under the locally adopted International Fire Code. Existing buildings undergoing major remodels may also need retrofits.

Code basis: Adopted IBC and IFCApartment standard: NFPA 13R

Elevator Maintenance

Some Restrictions

Elevators in Arlington fall under the Texas Health and Safety Code Chapter 754 elevator program administered by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation. Annual inspections by licensed inspectors are required and reports must be on file with the building.

State authority: TDLR Chapter 754Inspection frequency: Annual

Scaffold & Sidewalk Shed

Some Restrictions

Scaffolds on Arlington construction sites are governed by federal OSHA standards and the locally adopted International Building Code. Permits, fall protection, and licensed inspections are required for scaffolds above prescribed heights and on public rights-of-way.

Federal rule: OSHA Subpart LLocal code: Adopted IBC Ch 33

Anti-Mansionization

Some Restrictions

Arlington uses zoning lot coverage, floor area ratio, and height standards in its Unified Development Code to keep new homes proportional to surrounding neighborhoods. Variances need Zoning Board of Adjustment review and notice to nearby property owners.

Code basis: Arlington UDC Ch 26Typical max height: Thirty-five feet

Pest Control

Some Restrictions

Arlington property owners must keep buildings free of rodent and insect infestations under the citys Property Maintenance Code and Texas Property Code habitability standards. Repeat infestation complaints can trigger Code Compliance enforcement and licensed pest operator coordination.

Code basis: Adopted IPMCTenant law: Texas Property Code 92

Childcare Center Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Arlington childcare centers must comply with the Texas Health and Human Services minimum standards plus local building, fire, and zoning codes. Inspections include fire egress, lead and asbestos checks, and outdoor play area safety before licensing.

State licensor: Texas HHS CCRLead trigger: Pre-1978 building

Door Locking Hardware

Some Restrictions

Arlington commercial and multifamily buildings must follow International Building Code egress hardware rules so doors release in a single motion during emergencies. Special hardware is allowed for schools and daycares only when specific code conditions are met.

Code basis: Adopted IBC 1010Single-motion rule: Yes for egress

Green Building Code

Some Restrictions

Arlington enforces the International Energy Conservation Code and other International Code Council standards adopted by Chapter 10 of the City Code. Builders must meet insulation, air-sealing, and equipment efficiency thresholds before final inspections.

Energy code basis: Adopted IECCState authority: Texas HSC 388.003

🚬 Tobacco & Vaping

πŸ›οΈ Single-Use Items

πŸ’Ό Employment Preemption

πŸ›‚ Immigration Policy

πŸ›οΈ Homelessness & Encampment Rules

πŸ›΄ Mobility & Curb Rules

πŸ’§ Water Use Rules

πŸ—ΊοΈ Zoning Overlays & Bonuses

🩺 Public Health Rules

Food Handler Certification

Heavy Restrictions

All Arlington food-service workers must hold a Texas Department of State Health Services accredited food-handler card within 60 days of hire under Texas Health and Safety Code Β§438.

State law: Tex. HSC Chapter 438Card validity: Two years

Restaurant Grade Cards

Some Restrictions

Arlington restaurants are inspected by Tarrant County Public Health under contract; scores are posted publicly online and demerits above 30 require re-inspection within ten days.

Inspector: Tarrant County Public HealthRoutine inspections: At least 1 per year

Rodent Control

Some Restrictions

Arlington Code of Ordinances requires property owners to eliminate rodent harborage; the city and Tarrant County Public Health respond to complaints and may abate at the owner's expense.

Enforcement: Arlington Code ComplianceHealth partner: Tarrant County Public Health

Healthy Food Retail

Few Restrictions

Arlington does not mandate healthy food stocking in convenience stores; voluntary Tarrant County Public Health initiatives encourage produce access in identified food-desert census tracts.

Local mandate: NoneVoluntary programs: TCPH grants

Bed-Bug Rules

Some Restrictions

Texas Property Code treats bed bug infestations as a habitability defect; Arlington landlords must remediate within seven days of written notice or tenants may pursue statutory remedies.

Governing law: Texas Property Code Ch. 92Notice required: Written, before remedies

Syringe Disposal

Some Restrictions

Arlington follows Texas Health and Safety Code Chapter 363 on special waste; loose syringes in household trash are prohibited and must be placed in approved sharps containers.

Container: FDA sharps or rigid biohazardDrop-off: Pharmacies, county HHW events

Calorie Labeling

Few Restrictions

Arlington has no separate calorie-labeling ordinance; chain restaurants with 20 or more locations comply with federal FDA menu-labeling rules under the Affordable Care Act.

Governing rule: FDA ACA Β§4205Threshold: 20+ chain locations

🏨 Hotels & Lodging

πŸͺ Business Licensing & Operations

🚷 Public Conduct

Outdoor Smoking Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Arlington bans smoking and vaping inside all city-owned buildings, vehicles, and within 25 feet of public entrances. City parks, trails, and public playgrounds are smoke-free; private restaurants and bars set their own indoor policies.

City buildings: Smoke-freeEntrance buffer: 25 feet

Loud Party Ordinance

Some Restrictions

Arlington Code prohibits unreasonably loud gatherings audible 50 feet from the property line. APD can issue citations and, on a second response within 90 days, bill the host for police service costs under a nuisance party ordinance.

Audibility test: 50 feet from propertyQuiet hours: 10 p.m. to 7 a.m.

Public Alcohol Use

Some Restrictions

Arlington prohibits open alcohol containers in public streets and parks under Chapter 9 of the City Code, with limited exceptions inside licensed Entertainment District venues at AT&T Stadium, Globe Life Field, and Texas Live!

Public open container: ProhibitedEntertainment District: Licensed exception

Skateboarding Rules

Some Restrictions

Arlington prohibits skateboarding, rollerblading, and scooters on sidewalks within designated downtown and Entertainment District zones, on parking-garage ramps, and on private property posted against use.

No-skate zones: Downtown + Entertainment DistFirst-offense fine: Up to $200

Public Marijuana Use

Heavy Restrictions

Texas has no recreational cannabis. Public marijuana use, possession, and consumption are illegal anywhere in Arlington under Texas Health and Safety Code Chapter 481, with only narrow medical Compassionate Use Program exceptions.

Recreational cannabis: IllegalMedical access: TCUP low-THC only

Overall: What to Expect in Arlington

Arlington has 197 ordinances on file across 40 categories. Of these, 50 are rated permissive, 97 moderate, and 50 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Arlington compared to other cities.

Rules can change, and enforcement varies. Always verify specific requirements with the city directly before making major decisions like building a fence, listing on Airbnb, or starting a home business.

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